Archive for May 24th, 2010

Bird Conservationist Weighs In On Oil Spill

National Public Radio: As more oil reaches shore in the Gulf of Mexico, more birds, turtles and other coastal animals are being coated and killed by it. While in Plaquemines Parish recently, Melissa Block spoke to bird conservationist Melanie Driscoll of the Audubon Society's Louisiana program about what's happening, and what to expect.

Despite BP oil spill, Louisiana still loves Big Oil

Christian Science Monitor: One week after the Deepwater Horizon oil rig collapsed into the Gulf of Mexico, a letter arrived on President Obama's desk from Sen. Bill Nelson (D) of Florida, demanding an immediate moratorium on offshore oil drilling. The same day, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist – a man once seen cheering as Sarah Palin said "drill here, drill now" – called for a special state legislative session to ban offshore drilling. Even on the other side of the continent, the effects of the Gulf oil spill ...

La. Gov. Jindal Blasts Washington’s Response To Spill

National Public Radio: DAVID GREENE, host: This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. Im David Greene. RENEE MONTAGNE, host: And Im Renee Montagne. Along the Gulf Coast this morning, oil is washing ashore and there isstill no good idea of when the leaking well will be capped. We have two reports and we start in Louisiana. Governor Bobby Jindal now says 65 miles of his state's coastline have been touched by oil. Delicate wetlands and marshes, and the pelicans and other birds that live ...

United Kingdom: Raw sewage pumped into some bathing water `up to five times in a day’

Telegraph: Pipes affecting public beaches are supposed to spill out significant amounts of raw sewage and rainwater only three times at most during the whole summer. But data provided to a newspaper by the Environment Agency has revealed that in the worst cases some are operating as often as five times in a day. The data maps tens of thousands of sewage spills from overflow and outfall pipes into Britain's bathing waters during 2008 and 2009. The Environment Agency said the rainy ...

BP CEO inspects La. beach stained by Gulf oil

Associated Press: The chief executive of BP PLC walked the oil-stained sands of a closed Louisiana beach as workers in white coveralls and yellow boots tended to equipment being used to keep away crude gushing into the Gulf of Mexico. CEO Tony Hayward talked with the workers Monday at Fourchon Beach while the crews tended to booms meant to soak up the oil from the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Reporters were kept at a distance. Fourchon Beach is one of the few sandy beaches in Louisiana, where ...

Pressure piles on BP as Gulf spill widens

Reuters: The U.S. government piled pressure on BP Plc on Monday to clean up a "massive environmental mess" in the Gulf of Mexico amid growing anger at the oil giant's failure to contain a five-week-old oil spill. The company insisted it was doing all it could to try to seal a blown-out oil well spewing hundreds of thousands of gallons (liters) of oil into the Gulf every day, a disaster that threatens to become the worst U.S. oil spill in history. London-based BP said it would make ...